I had a best friend in middle school. Her family was cool, especially her mom. We would pretend to be sisters, and we spent every day together.
On my 13th birthday, my mom revealed that my friend was actually my half-sister. I thought it was a joke at first. I remember laughing and saying, “That’s a weird prank, Mom.” But she wasn’t joking.
She sat me down and explained that before she met my dad, she had a brief relationship with another man. Things didn’t work out between them, and he moved away. She never told anyone, not even him, that she was pregnant.
Years later, that man married someone else and had a daughter. That daughter was my best friend, Lina. It turned out Lina’s mom knew.
She found out when Lina was around five, after discovering some old letters and photos. But she never told Lina because she didn’t want to complicate her world. Somehow, fate had brought us together anyway.
Two girls at the same school, who just “clicked” without ever knowing why. I felt betrayed at first—by my mom, by Lina’s mom, by the world. It was too much to take in on my birthday.
I didn’t want a secret sister. I wanted a normal birthday party with pizza and music and dumb games. Lina didn’t know yet.
My mom told me to wait until I felt ready to tell her. But how do you even begin that kind of conversation? For weeks, I avoided her.
I started sitting with other people at lunch, stopped replying to her texts, and said I was busy whenever she asked to hang out. She thought she had done something wrong. She cried in the girls’ bathroom one day, and someone told me about it.
That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept thinking about how we used to braid each other’s hair and laugh about dumb boys and share our secrets. I missed her, but I didn’t know how to face her.
Finally, I told my mom I was ready. We called Lina’s mom and asked if we could come over to talk. I don’t think Lina’s mom was surprised.
She must have known the truth would come out eventually. When we arrived, Lina looked confused and hurt. I asked if we could talk alone, and we went to her room.
I took a deep breath and told her everything—about our moms, about the past, about what I had learned on my birthday. She just stared at me, her eyes wide. I expected her to scream or cry or tell me I was crazy.
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